Phil_F_NM
Camera hacker
Down Under mentioned the environmental/ecological impact and this is the other question, how does owning a THIRD vehicle sit with you?
You could fix up that truck to pull a small trailer and be good to go. Repairing/restoring something already in possession, as you intend to do, while not adding more stuff into your life and the life of everything around you. A third vehicle is also a third lubricant pan, and Mercedes don't leak oil, they mark their spot. Actually, just say all diesels do that.
One other possibly which is a really great option, is to simply rent the RV for your time of use. It reduces the footprint of vehicles, the overall consumption and collection, the maintenance, and insurance burden. The ownership of a new-to-you used niche market vehicle is not an investment into anything other than your potential leisure time. These vehicles do nothing but depreciate in value and will continue to do so until they are recycled into razor blades and plastic bottles. Besides, you should definitely rent one, drive for a few hours, and camp in it for a few days, before pulling the trigger on one of your own. My paternal grandparents lived out of a trailer, moving from US forest service job to job (campground host) for over twenty years and I lived with them for a good amount of that time. When I was a toddler, my mom and I lived in a truck bed camper, not unlike what was probably on your old Chevy. It is a very different lifestyle to adapt to, even for a long weekend; like being used to dry air conditioning then walking out into a humid urban heat emergency.
Phil
You could fix up that truck to pull a small trailer and be good to go. Repairing/restoring something already in possession, as you intend to do, while not adding more stuff into your life and the life of everything around you. A third vehicle is also a third lubricant pan, and Mercedes don't leak oil, they mark their spot. Actually, just say all diesels do that.
One other possibly which is a really great option, is to simply rent the RV for your time of use. It reduces the footprint of vehicles, the overall consumption and collection, the maintenance, and insurance burden. The ownership of a new-to-you used niche market vehicle is not an investment into anything other than your potential leisure time. These vehicles do nothing but depreciate in value and will continue to do so until they are recycled into razor blades and plastic bottles. Besides, you should definitely rent one, drive for a few hours, and camp in it for a few days, before pulling the trigger on one of your own. My paternal grandparents lived out of a trailer, moving from US forest service job to job (campground host) for over twenty years and I lived with them for a good amount of that time. When I was a toddler, my mom and I lived in a truck bed camper, not unlike what was probably on your old Chevy. It is a very different lifestyle to adapt to, even for a long weekend; like being used to dry air conditioning then walking out into a humid urban heat emergency.
Phil
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